Posts tagged ‘Beet’

August 4, 2011

Beet rendezvous

Posted by Chie

Beets are one of those vegetables that we just don’t hear about in Japan. My first taste of them was from a canned variety at a salad bar somewhere. I didn’t taste the real thing until I went to college here in the Northwest. Wow, they seemed like a treat!

A family friend of ours used to make a delicious creamy red soup…now I know it was Borscht.

Here are two dishes I make regularly when I see beets glowing amongst the other fruits and vegetables.


Pickled beets

At our house, we eat these as a snack. I’ve read that when you are craving sweet and you eat something sour, it satisfies that craving.

3 medium beets or 6-7 small ones

Extra virgin olive oil

3 sprigs of thyme

½ c apple cider vinegar or brown rice vinegar

¼ c water

½ – 1 tsp Celtic sea salt

1-3 tsp honey (Adjust to desired sweetness)

Wash beets and cut off the stems. Place in a piece of foil big enough to enclose them. Drizzle with oil and sea salt. Toss and fold the foil over so the edges can be crimped together to form a tightly sealed pouch.

Place on a baking sheet and bake for 45 minutes or until easily pierced with a knife.

Cool just enough to be able to peel the skins off. You may want to use a towel that can get stained to hold the beet in your hand and peel off the skin. The skin should slip right off with a little pressure. Cut into wedges and place in a jar with a lid.

Dissolve the vinegar, honey and salt in a small pot. Pour into the jar over the beets and add the thyme sprigs. Let sit at room temperature for about an hour to let the flavors meld together. Store in the refrigerator for two weeks.

Beet, chevre and walnut salad

One of my friends in culinary school, Brandy, inspired me to make this salad years ago. Now it’s a favorite.

6 medium beets

1 T + 1/3 c extra virgin olive oil

½ sea salt

1/4 c balsamic vinegar, or to taste

2 cloves garlic

1 medium shallot, minced

½ bunch thyme leaves

3 oz chevre

½ bunch Italian parsley, chopped

1/3 c walnuts, preferably sprouted (soaked and dehydrated to be more digestible), chopped

Place the whole beets and about one tablespoon oil in a piece of foil big enough to enclose them into an airtight pouch. Roast at 375 F for about 45 minutes or until they’re easily pierced with a knife.

Slice the garlic, sprinkle on some salt and mash into a paste with the side of your knife.

Remove beets from oven and allow to cool to handling temperature. The beet skins will come off easily if you want them peeled though you may keep the skins on if you’d like. You may want to use a towel that can be stained so your hands won’t stain. Cut the beets into 1/3-inch cubes.

Toss with the balsamic, oil, sea salt, shallots, thyme leaves and garlic paste.

Place in a medium serving bowl. Garnish with parsley, crumbled chevre, and walnuts.

You can eat these on romaine leaf “boats” for a fun variation. Enjoy!

August 1, 2011

Beets, yesterday and today

Posted by Jenni

I confess that the crinkle-cut beets in the salad bars of my childhood, usually in a clear bin between the sprouts and cottage cheese, were one of my favorites. As a kid, I loved their slippery texture and the way they colored my Ranch dressing pink.

This is because I didn’t know any better.

In the brand of 1980’s suburbia where I grew up, nothing was home-canned. We bought what was available at the store and ate what restaurants had to offer.

The concept of doing our own food, much less creating the space for it to emerge from ground, coop or hive, was as foreign to me as the faraway places that grew our imported olives.

Beets from Rising River Farm.

I tasted home-canned beets for the first time when I was in my twenties, at a homey Midwest kitchen table, and had to stop myself after three servings. The experience made beets a touchstone of the DIY food movement for me.

Years later, I discovered the candy-like flavor of fresh, roasted beets and a recipe that combines them with orange slices, basil and balsamic. I could roast my own beets and they tasted better, much better, than the machine-cut version I’d liked as a child. I was hooked.

Beets from Calliope Farm

A note in one of my cookbooks (the same one with the orange and balsamic recipe) notes that when roasting beets, they don’t need to be peeled. Did you catch that? Because it makes it so much easier. Beets don’t need to be peeled. Beets don’t need to be peeled! That means less stained fingers and, I presume, more vitamins. Yea.

And, as their bright colors might suggest, beets are very good to eat. They contain folate, magnesium and potassium and the greens are full of vitamin C, iron and calcium.

Today I made some roasted beets because writing about them made me hungry. I’m visiting Washington D.C. and beets are in season here, too. So we got a bunch and cooked them up. Soon buttery golden beets and Chioggias (the kind with a bulls-eye of concentric circles inside) will be in the markets, too.

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

Chop beets into chunks thin enough to roast quickly (today mine were about 1/4 inch).

Chop greens and set aside.

Toss beets with olive oil, salt and pepper in a pan with sides.

Roast for about 10 minutes and mix them up a bit. Roast another 10 or 15 minutes.

About  five minutes before beets are done, mince garlic and saute with greens in olive or coconut oil until wilted and bright green.

Test beets with a fork. They should be very soft and have a bubbly skin. A few around the edges of the pan will have browned corners. These are the best ones.

Serve over the sauteed greens.

Tonight, I served mine in a pink bowl that belonged to my great-grandmother, which felt very sweet (like the beets).

Bring back your beets on Thursday and we’ll cook up something else sweet and delicious.

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